Dunn:Tools/Wiki Tutorial
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Revision as of 19:32, 1 May 2010
- By flanking this entire code with <center> and </center> you can center the app on the screen:
- The Dunn lab website uses the embedding feature a lot so you can look at different pages and see things like pdfs, calendars, and powerpoints embedded as well.
- An additional feature that you can use is the iframe feature that allows you to embed entire webpages onto yours. I don't use it very much and am not a pro at it, but Anthony Salvagno from the Koch lab has mastered this feature so you can check out his notebook and get good tips about how to do this (ie. this Friendfeed page).
Contents |
Pubmed Footnoting
- Ramalldf 01:31, 1 July 2009 (EDT):This is really cool! It will basically place all of the relevant information about the paper you're citing simply by entering the pubmed id # in the way that I have below [1]. Thus, with the first brackets you're basically placing the footnote # and with the second set of brackets, you tell it where you want the citation to go (in my example, under the references section). I wouldn't play around with trying to arrange the numbering at this point (notice how it may not be in order?), it can get really messy really quickly. As long as the character or word that you assign the citation to matches the one you want in the 'biblio' brackets you should get the correct citation.
References
Creating new pages and templates
New Pages
- You can create a page by editing any exisiting page and doing the following. It will only become a subpage if you assign it to be as described below, but until I find a way to create a new page (ie. like a sandbox?) without having to go and edit a random page, you should do the following:
- So I've found out that you can create pages in the following way:
- Two of these brackets [[ ]] with a word in the middle will create a new page wherever you are. Unfortunately, the wiki has the potential to become HUGE, so in order to keep track of the locations of these pages you should try to create a link back to the page where this one originated from.
- In order to do this you must enter the name of the new page with a "/" mark in between it and the page that brought you to it. For example:
Lab News/Editing wiki
- "Editing wiki" is the new name of my page. It will be red until I click on it and begin typing stuff and saving it.
- If I want the link to not look like "Lab News/Editing wiki" but instead want the link to have another word leading to the link, then I will put whatever this sign is "|" after the name of my new page and type the word after it. ie.:
see?
- This type of writing will work on any page that you want and even on the toolbar if you decided to change it (you must remember the name of the page of course, cause if it is not the same, then the wiki will create a new one).
- You can link/access a page that you want either by copying down the url and inserting it or just by placing the name of the page in brackets.
Templates
- Templates are preset components of a page that you can immediately insert into a page without having to type out all of the individual commands every time (ie. the toolbar and green frame on our site). You can create a template simply by typing what you want the name of the template to be inside curly brackets {{}}.
- This will appear in red and basically looks like a new page that you can edit any way you want (so it can include text and/or pictures).
- A great example of a template is the main menu template (notice used the url to retrieve instead of using the curly brackets because the curly brackets would've put the actual template on the page which is not what I want to do).
- Anyways, the following is some advice about editing those. I don't know that much about these, but this is how I learned how to use the toolbar template which I found on the openwetware public wiki somewhere.
Colors
- For a lot of templates you can adjust the size and colors of the components belonging to that template (ie. width and color of a box).
- The colors that are available can be found in theselinks. Typing the name or number of the color as it appears on that page will allow you to change the color to exactly that one (think that its case sensitive).
Template Toolbar
- Having a toolbar on every page you designate like we have above can be very useful for accessing pages easily. I would be very careful about making sure that the links you create on the toolbar correspond to the pages that you find elsewhere on the site. Take a look at how I made mine by viewing the code for our main page.
Gadgets
- WikEd feature on Openwetware can be quite useful because it automatically inserts the necessary commands into a highlighted set of characters in order to accomplish many things (ie. underlining). I was able to add a whole bunch of tools to my edit toolbar. Here is how to install it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Cacycle/wikEd_installation#On-wiki_installation_code and here is a description of all of the buttons: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Cacycle/wikEd_help
Final Notes on Editing the Wiki
- A page can get completely lost if you don't place its link somewhere visible or if you don't make the new page as a subpage of an existing one.
- Try playing around with it. Here's a page that describes some cool things to try out, and here's another tutorial.
- Not all pages will have the easy to navigate main menu template or mini menu templates (though you can add them manually to your pages) so if you get lost somehow, the best way to get back to where you were would be to go back to the main page or go to the 'Recent Changes' link (both of which are on the top left of the sidebar).


